This has been a revelation! Definitely employing this product in my shop! One friendly critique- you might want to work on keeping your audio levels even on your future videos. While you’re talking I have to run the sound up to hear you, then the music comes in about 3x louder and You have to run the volume down quickly.
Will this hold up well on a frequently used/cleaned kitchen table? I refinished the top last year and it already got ruined, so was considering stripping/sanding and then just using Briwax for the finish.
Wax alone is a soft finish so depending on the amount of use the surface gets you can re apply to bring the finish back . To increase wear and water ressistance you could clean the wax off with mineral spirits and do a coat or two of Tung Oil or Hard Wax Oil which makes a much more water and wear resistant finish.
@@TheBriwaxGuy Thanks for reply, this was the video I was refering to, near the end you say if you want a higher res copy of the samples to email you. I'm interested in getting the samples used on pine. Can you still send them if I email you on the gmail address given?
can the "scrubbed pine" look be achieved with maple or oak furniture? i know it wouldn't look exactly the same but if I use the briwax on it after sanding it would it look similar? thanks!
Did he say what type of wood ths is? I am loving the scrubbed pine look too and trying to acheive that same look but with other types of wood. Have you had any luck?
I don't know Briwax even though I have finished products for years. Is Briwax meant too be a final topcoat or will it need a lacquer or varnish (or similar) topcoat? I called Briwax & could not get in touch with the right person. Thanks & thanks for the videos.
Briwax is a blend of Beeswax and Carnauba wax. Wax is always the last step since nothing sticks to wax. It can be used over any fully cured finish (oil, lacquer, shellac polyurethane). Nothing stick to wax however which is what makes wax paper useful. You can use Briwax as a complete finish or to finish off any varnish to give it a silky feel.
Sorry for the slow reply but the our furniture shop has kept me away. I made a video about this issue which is very common. It is best explained here ruclips.net/video/DH4UK45xWH4/видео.html
can i use this product on my Hickory cabinets without sanding? Just trying to get rid of orange color of original stain
This has been a revelation! Definitely employing this product in my shop!
One friendly critique- you might want to work on keeping your audio levels even on your future videos. While you’re talking I have to run the sound up to hear you, then the music comes in about 3x louder and You have to run the volume down quickly.
Great stuff! thanks for the tips!
Will this hold up well on a frequently used/cleaned kitchen table? I refinished the top last year and it already got ruined, so was considering stripping/sanding and then just using Briwax for the finish.
Wax alone is a soft finish so depending on the amount of use the surface gets you can re apply to bring the finish back . To increase wear and water ressistance you could clean the wax off with mineral spirits and do a coat or two of Tung Oil or Hard Wax Oil which makes a much more water and wear resistant finish.
Hi, can you apply this to sanded stair treads for a natural wood effect? Thank you.
Yes. It is perfect for stair treads. You can just re-apply in a few years in heavy wear places like treads.
Do you still offer the colour comparison on different woods across the Briwax range?
I'm sorry. I don't understand the question. I have a video of the different Briwax colors on 10 different species of wood.
Yes was reffering to that. Looking to use briwax on some different woods and you mentioned you had a high res pdf or something for these.
@@royster3345 ruclips.net/video/UHVeq1MdZe8/видео.html
@@TheBriwaxGuy Thanks for reply, this was the video I was refering to, near the end you say if you want a higher res copy of the samples to email you. I'm interested in getting the samples used on pine. Can you still send them if I email you on the gmail address given?
@@royster3345 Sorry I misunderstood. I have higher res sample photos. Just email and let me know which wood species you want. thebriwaxguy@gmail.com
This was helpful 👍
can the "scrubbed pine" look be achieved with maple or oak furniture? i know it wouldn't look exactly the same but if I use the briwax on it after sanding it would it look similar?
thanks!
It'll get a similar feel. Look at the choosing the right color video to get some guidance on color.
Did he say what type of wood ths is? I am loving the scrubbed pine look too and trying to acheive that same look but with other types of wood. Have you had any luck?
I don't know Briwax even though I have finished products for years. Is Briwax meant too be a final topcoat or will it need a lacquer or varnish (or similar) topcoat? I called Briwax & could not get in touch with the right person.
Thanks & thanks for the videos.
Briwax is a blend of Beeswax and Carnauba wax. Wax is always the last step since nothing sticks to wax. It can be used over any fully cured finish (oil, lacquer, shellac polyurethane). Nothing stick to wax however which is what makes wax paper useful. You can use Briwax as a complete finish or to finish off any varnish to give it a silky feel.
@@TheBriwaxGuy Thank you
Great video. Thanks
I have applied to a table and it looks very streaky/smudged. Any suggestions?
Sorry for the slow reply but the our furniture shop has kept me away. I made a video about this issue which is very common. It is best explained here ruclips.net/video/DH4UK45xWH4/видео.html
Great video thanks!
Ditch or turn the music down buddy, otherwise good vid
I liked the water marks and other marks. You took a lot of the character away from it.
Still plenty of marks I can see.
I used to sniff that as a kid
The music is annoying
Sorry! I'm a furniture maker not so much a movie maker. I'll try to correct this in the future.
Ruined by overload music